BY Neal Broverman
January 26 2010 1:50 PM ET
Rand Skolnick had only four months to live after being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in the spring of 2008. So Skolnick, the owner of a successful New Jersey–based vitamin company, used that time to collaborate with his partner, Terrence Meck, on the goals of a foundation he created years earlier but had yet to turn into a working charity. By the time Skolnick passed away on July 4, 2008, at the age of 50, Meck knew exactly what Skolnick wanted to accomplish through his organization.
“We discussed what he wanted to see happen with his legacy,” the 32-year-old Meck says. “We had opened a few businesses together, mainly a gay bar and restaurant in Pennsylvania. I stepped away from that to turn the fund into a working foundation.”
Called the Palette Fund—and named after a Los Angeles restaurant where Skolnick met his best friend, Peter Benassi—Skolnick’s foundation launched late last year with a $30 million endowment, Meck as executive director, Benassi as chairman, and a mission of supporting education, gay rights, and healthy eating habits.
Palette’s focus comes not only from Skolnick and Meck’s discussions that spring but also their experiences. After hiring a nutritionist who specializes in cooking for cancer patients, the couple began to view food as medicine.
“Nutrition, whether with cancer or HIV, is a great tool in treatment,” Meck says.
Palette now donates nutritional cookbooks to Gay Men’s Health Crisis, sponsors a healthy-eating initiative at a Harlem school, and partners with designer Donna Karan, who lost her husband to cancer in 2001, to sponsor a series of seminars on food and wellness.
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